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Noè

COD: GIA17 - wine coolerDesigner:
Giulio Iacchetti

There are several gestures we make when we hold a bottle of wine: store, open, pour, hold and cool. Giulio Iacchetti is the designer of a unique collection of objects, the Noè series, one object for each gesture. Thanks to its ample proportions and the series of compartments dotted along its upper edge, the Noè wine cooler can hold up to five bottles of wine or two magnums. Although this kind of wine cooler was already used in the Renaissance (we can see something similar in the paintings of the time) it is inspired by the Vasque of the French wine tradition.

There are several gestures we make when we hold a bottle of wine: store, open, pour, hold and cool. Giulio Iacchetti is the designer of a unique collection of objects, the Noè series, one object for each gesture. Thanks to its ample proportions and the series of compartments dotted along its upper edge, the Noè wine cooler can hold up to five bottles of wine or two magnums. Although this kind of wine cooler was already used in the Renaissance (we can see something similar in the paintings of the time) it is inspired by the Vasque of the French wine tradition.

Diameter (cm):
33.00Height (cm):
20.00Item code:
GIA17

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Giulio Iacchetti

Giulio Iacchetti, industrial designer since 1992, designs for many brands including Abet Laminati, Alessi, Danese, Elica, Foscarini, Globo Ceramiche, Jannelli&Volpi, Hastens, Magis, Meritalia, Moleskine, Pandora design. The distinctive characteristics of his work is the research and definition of new object typologies, like the Moscardino, the biodegradable spoon/fork designed with Matteo Ragni and for which, in 2001, he has been awarded with Compasso d’Oro. In 2009 he was awarded the prize for innovation – Premio dei Premi – by the President of the Italian Republic for the Coop Eureka project, which brought the design in the large-scale retail trade. In May 2009 the Triennale di Milano held a solo exhibition entitled “Giulio Iacchetti. Disobedient objects “. In November 2012 he launches Internoitaliano, the “factory network” made up of many craftsmen labs with whom he signs and produces furniture and accessories inspired by the italian way of living. He had also pursued his personal research project into new design topics such as the symbol of cross from which came the exhibition titled Cruciale held by the Diocesan Museum, Basilica di Santo Stefano Rotondo in Rome and by Castello di Lombardia in Enna, Sicily.
In 2014, he won his second Compasso d’Oro for the design of the manhole covers Sfera, designed with Matteo Ragni for Montini.
www.giulioiacchetti.com

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